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Liquefaction Hazard Assessment

Liquefaction hazard assessment maps where earthquake-induced liquefaction is likely to occur and how severe its surface effects will be, across areas ranging from a city to a whole region. Unlike site-specific triggering analysis, which evaluates a single soil column from borehole data, regional assessment must predict liquefaction over wide areas where detailed subsurface data are sparse, so it relies on geospatial proxies for soil susceptibility together with a map of seismic demand. Zhu, Baise, and Thompson's 2017 geospatial model exemplifies the modern approach, predicting the probability of liquefaction from globally available variables such as slope-derived shear-wave velocity, a compound topographic index, and magnitude-adjusted peak ground acceleration, calibrated on documented liquefaction from past earthquakes. The Youd and Idriss 2001 consensus framework supplies the underlying site-scale physics and the severity indices that translate probability into expected damage. The product is a hazard map showing the spatial probability and intensity of liquefaction. It supports rapid post-earthquake response, loss estimation, and land-use planning where borehole-by-borehole analysis is infeasible.

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  1. Zhu, J., Baise, L. G., & Thompson, E. M. (2017). An Updated Geospatial Liquefaction Model for Global Application. Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America, 107(3), 1365-1385. DOI: 10.1785/0120160198
  2. Youd, T. L., & Idriss, I. M. (2001). Liquefaction Resistance of Soils: Summary Report from the 1996 NCEER and 1998 NCEER/NSF Workshops on Evaluation of Liquefaction Resistance of Soils. Journal of Geotechnical and Geoenvironmental Engineering, 127(4), 297-313. DOI: 10.1061/(ASCE)1090-0241(2001)127:4(297)

How to cite this page

ScholarGate. (2026, June 23). Liquefaction Hazard Assessment. ScholarGate. https://scholargate.app/en/disaster-studies/liquefaction-hazard-assessment

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ScholarGateLiquefaction Hazard Assessment (Liquefaction Hazard Assessment). Retrieved 2026-06-24 from https://scholargate.app/en/disaster-studies/liquefaction-hazard-assessment · Dataset: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.20539026